Sheep Capture

JREG19

Lil-Rokslider
Joined
Oct 24, 2021
Messages
160
Location
Caldwell, ID
Feb 3 and 4th, I volunteered with the Idaho Wild Sheep Foundation to capture Bighorn Sheep with the Idaho Department of Fish and Game.

I'm writing this to encourage you to be a part of the Wild Sheep Foundation on a national and local level. Sheep do not support themselves like deer and elk, there's just not enough tags to get the proper funding.

I got an email the week before the capture, saying they needed volunteers. I knew I had to be a part of it. This was my first time volunteering with IDWSF.

The captures that I was apart of were along the Salmon River. The main objective was to catch 8 ewes that had previously tested positive for Movi (a respiratory disease). We wanted to see: do they still test positive? Are they positive but relatively healthy? Are they positive and sick (etc.)? if they test positive twice, they are culled.

The process: a plane would fly around using telemetry to find the Sheep. After the plane found them, he radioed to a helicopter with their location. The helicopter would then try to find the specific ewes that previously tested positive (they call them "dirty girls"). Once the dirty girls were identified, a crew member used a net gun to capture the Sheep. After the Sheep was caught a "mugger" would go down, blind fold, and hobble the Sheep. After the Sheep was hobbled they put her in a "sling" and attached her to the bottom of the helicopter and flew her to us at the "sling site." Once the Sheep touched down, we got her over to a scale and weighed her. After we weighed her, we laid her down on a tarp and immediately checked her temperature. If she was too warm we put snow and water on her to cool her down. We kept a constant eye on that temperature. Then all at the same time we got an age on her, we took blood, a nasal swab, an ultrasound of her back to make sure she had a good amount of fat, we also did an ultrasound to see if she was pregnant, we looked for scabies and any other injuries, finally we added ear tags and a GPS collar to track them. Once we were done with our testing we carried them away from our tools and released her. We caught 15 ewes the first day and I think 18 the second.

This was a pretty amazing experience and I encourage any one who has the opportunity to go on one of these, to do it.

It was hard to get some good pics because of all the people.
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JREG19

JREG19

Lil-Rokslider
Joined
Oct 24, 2021
Messages
160
Location
Caldwell, ID
When would they be culled? After the test results I assume then fly back out in the chopper and shoot it? Or capture then kill?
Those are good questions and I'm not sure the answers.

I would imagine they would do it soon after the results.

Helicopters are very expensive and it is a contractor who does the flying/mugging so I would assume they might sneek in close to make sure the identity and use a rifle (that's speculation of course).
 
Joined
Dec 11, 2018
Messages
87
Location
Pennsylvania
Thank you for volunteering your time to do this. I'm on the board of the Eastern Chapter and we were glad to be able to provide some funds for this and others that have and will take place in Idaho. I would love to be able to participate in a capture some day.
 
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JREG19

JREG19

Lil-Rokslider
Joined
Oct 24, 2021
Messages
160
Location
Caldwell, ID
Thank you for volunteering your time to do this. I'm on the board of the Eastern Chapter and we were glad to be able to provide some funds for this and others that have and will take place in Idaho. I would love to be able to participate in a capture some day.
Thank you for helping support Idaho sheep. It's definitely worth going if you can make the time!
 
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